Category: Technology and the Church
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The Churches That Forgot What Christ Remembered
Institutional Memory, Selective History, and the Seven Churches of Revelation Churches remember many things. They remember founding pastors, successful conferences, building projects, moments of revival, numerical growth, and seasons of public influence. They preserve…
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The Christ Who Left Things Unfinished
Jesus, Human Limitation, and the Holiness of Work We Cannot Complete We often think of faithfulness as completing everything. We want every question answered, every wound healed, every injustice corrected, every responsibility completed, and…
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When Christians Defend Their Image More Than the Truth
What Jesus reveals about honesty, repentance, leadership, and the modern Church Christianity makes extraordinary claims about truth. Christians confess that Jesus Christ is “the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). Scripture calls…
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The Church in an Age of Exhaustion
Why Christian faithfulness requires more than productivity, visibility, and constant activity Many people are tired. Not simply physically tired, although that is real. They are emotionally tired, spiritually tired, socially tired, and mentally tired.…
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The Theology of Attention: What We Give Our Minds to Shapes Our Souls
Christian discipleship is not only about what we believe. It is also about what repeatedly captures our attention. We live in an age of constant interruption. Phones vibrate. Messages arrive. Videos begin before we…
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When Christian Influence Becomes More Important Than Christian Witness
The Church is not called to chase power, popularity, or cultural approval. It is called to remain faithful to Jesus Christ. Christians often speak about influence. Churches want to influence cities. Leaders want to…
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When Christianity Becomes Content
The Church Was Called to Make Disciples, Not Feed the Algorithm Christianity has never been more available. A person can hear preaching at any hour. They can open a Bible app in seconds. They…
